Monday, December 07, 2009

I hope you don't give up.

I have been reluctant to write. Searching for thoughts worth sharing; those I feel comfortable revealing.

Cold rain is falling outside. This morning, thunder woke me from the couch. A friend from the fireline is staying with me. I took the sofa, and gave him my bed.

It would be a good day to sleep in, with gray skies and chilling rain, but now I am one floor below the ground, at the library. Preparing for class, but not really. Maybe just escaping into silence by myself, before I excitedly and reluctantly enter the classroom.

International Development people are strange folk. I grow tired of their postmodern drudgery. Empty words without definition. "But we want to change the world," they say. "To benefit humankind; to bring light to those in darkness."

But in the quiet of my mind I ask, "where does the dark come from? And from where do you gain your concept of light?"

Goodness must have a source, and I know that it is not 'I'. With my great human potential for evil, change for my sake alone is worth nothing to me. The world is not subjective; "rightness" is not "rightness" when and where I say it is. There is something greater, and I will find it.

I am weary.

4 comments:

  1. Keep going, Seth. Some of the best and most rewarding things are only achieved by persisting on through the seemingly impossible. You may question yourself at times, and I know you are and may stay mentally and physically drained. But I KNOW you can and will accomplish all you set out to. You are an inspiration, and we're all rooting for you. Love you, cuz!

    ~Alissa

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  2. Wow. Dark. Mysterious. Say more!
    -Vernon

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  3. Seth,

    Your Dad has put me onto your blog. I am interested in your work and study. All true transformation begins with the inner journey - there are no changed societial structures without changed men and women. Few take the journey to ride 'the monsters of the soul all the way down' (Anne Dillard). I did my doctoral work in Oxford UK concerning transformation for youth and children at risk in Romania following the collapse of communism. Your dad heard me speak in Joliet.

    Bill Prevette (www.prevetteresearch.net)

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